Parashat Kedoshim
A New Look At
Philanthropy
The commandment to
leave behind some of the harvest for the poor challenges our assumptions about
to whom the food belongs in the first place.
By Rabbi Neal Joseph Loevinger
The following article is reprinted with permission from Kolel: The Adult Centre for Liberal Jewish
Learning.
Overview
Kedoshim literally means "holy things," and this
parsha is a list of behaviors that are either holy or not holy. These laws are
both ethical and religious, and sometimes both, as in the prohibitions against
certain kinds of incest. Other famous laws in this section include the
prohibition against putting a "stumbling block" before the blind, and
the commandment to "love your fellow human as yourself." Israel is
commanded to be holy just as Israel's God is Holy.
In Focus
"When you reap the harvest of your land, do not
completely reap the corners of the field, and do not gather the gleanings of
the harvest. Do not completely glean your vineyard, nor gather all the fallen
grapes, but leave them behind for the poor and the stranger--I am Adonai your
God" (Leviticus 19:9-10).
Pshat
This beautiful commandment is called peah, which
means "corner." One who is gathering their harvest leaves a portion
for the poor to gather. There are two parts to this mitzvah (commandment):
one is leaving some of the grain or produce just as it is for the poor to
gather, and the next part is leaving some on the ground, after it is fallen,
and not picking up every last bit.
Drash
If we took these verses absolutely literally, we would learn
a powerful moral teaching about setting aside some of our resources to help
those in need. However, we can also infer that the creation of a caring,
interdependent community is a greater priority than strict property rights--for
ultimately, the land belongs to God, not its human steward. We see a similar
idea in the laws of the Shmitta (Sabbatical) and Yovel (Jubilee)
years, described in Leviticus 25.
The 16th-century Sephardic commentator Moshe Alshich notes
that ascribing ownership of the land to God reduces the tensions caused by
social inequality between rich and poor: Both
farmer, stranger, and the poor are really equal before God. Just as the rich
person employs laborers to cut his grain, stack his wheat, and so on, so we are
all God's laborers. [i.e., God "employs" the better-off in the job of
providing for the poor.] But when performing this commandment, God describes
the land as if it were "yours..."
The Torah could have
continued by saying: "it shall be for the poor and the stranger." By
using the phrase "leave them behind," the Torah emphasizes the
stranger and poor person's prior claim to these gleanings and leavings.
God wants the farmer
to treat the poor respectfully, not to rob them of dignity. Therefore,
"leave them behind"--you are not giving a handout, but you will
simply leave it, they will help themselves. "Don't completely glean"
is the fact that you do not complete the harvest, which is the signal to the
poor person that he is taking what he is entitled to, not what the farmer
decides to give him.
The anonymity of the
recipient--since the farmer does not know who picks his field--is what
preserves the poor person's dignity. (Adapted from R. Moshe Alshich on the
Torah, translated by E. Munk.)
While I cannot claim to have policy expertise in the realm
of social welfare, I think that the dignity of the poor is something rarely
considered in many current assistance programs. Food is not a privilege to be
handed out according to the mood of the wealthy, but a right, regardless of
social standing or status. The needy have a "prior claim" to a
certain level of sustenance--if the better off don't provide the "corners
of their fields," they themselves would be guilty of taking something that
is not theirs by right.
This is a whole different way of looking at philanthropy--a
person may indeed be generous, but up to a certain point, material things don't
really belong to us in the first place. Rather, a Jewish perspective on
material goods sees such resources as being loaned to us for the privilege of
bringing about good things. (Maybe that's why they're called
"goods!")
We are all stewards on God's land, as it were. This is not
to impugn anybody's generosity, not at all. The commandment of peah challenges
us to think about the distinction between generosity--which might mean
"going above and beyond"--and basic obligations, which are incumbent
upon all who can meet them.
Rabbi Neal Joseph Loevinger is currently the rabbi of
Temple Israel of Swampscott and Marblehead, Mass. A former student at Kolel, he served as Kolel’s Director of
Outreach from late 1999-2001. He was
ordained in the first graduating class of the Ziegler School of Rabbinic
Studies of the University of Judaism, and holds a Master’s of Environmental
Studies from York University in Toronto.